NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL NEWSLETTER Representing Northill, Upper and Lower Caldecote, Ickwell, Thorncote, Hatch, Budna and Bells Brook Issue 42 Summer 2018

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NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL NEWSLETTER Representing Northill, Upper and Lower Caldecote, Ickwell, Thorncote, Hatch, Budna and Bells Brook Issue 42 Summer 2018 NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL NEWSLETTER Representing Northill, Upper and Lower Caldecote, Ickwell, Thorncote, Hatch, Budna and Bells Brook Issue 42 Summer 2018 Contents At the Annual Meeting of the Council on May 24th, Cllr 1. Election of Helen Papworth was re-elected Chair and Cllr Rob Smith Chair & Vice Chair Vice Chair of the Council. Cllr Keith Bennett has since been elected as Chair of the Planning Committee, and Cllr David Grants Awarded Milton Chair of the Finance and General Purposes (F&GP) CBC Customer Committee. Services Women of the ANNUAL GRANTS AWARDED Year Award Northill Parish Council recently considered grant applications from local organisations and awarded a total of 2 Planning Updates £5,800 for various projects. Full details can be found on the website. A small balance remains in the budget for any Neighbourhood Plan organisations that wish to submit an application. A grant application form can be found on the website or please 3. A1 Meeting contact the Clerk. Funding: the Parochial Chari- The next Parish Council Meeting is on Thursday 13th Sept ties. at the Methodist Church Hall, Upper Caldecote at 7.30pm. Adoption & fos- tering CUSTOMER SERVICES Central Bedfordshire Council’s Customer Services are now 4./5 Shuttle- worth Airshows located at Biggleswade and Sandy Libraries. Opening times are: 6. Ivel Sprinter Biggleswade: Tuesday to Thursday — 9.00am to 5.00pm, Village signs Friday — 9.00am to 4.00pm Sandy: Wednesday — 9.00am to 5.00pm Royal British Legion Congratulations to Northill Parish Councillor Wendi Momen 7. Space Eti- who was shortlisted in the final three for the Police and quette for Dogs Crime Commissioner’s Women of the Year Award. 8. Contact de- tails PAGE 2 NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL ISSUE 42 RECENT PLANNING MATTERS Lower Caldecote. Two applications at land adjacent to The Grange, Grange Lane, Lower Caldecote have been submitted to CBC. One (CB/18/01946/OUT) is for 8 dwellings with all matters reserved except access. The second one (CB/18/02228/FULL) is for the change of use of land for the stationing of caravans for residential purposes. NPC objected to both proposals. The applications have not yet been determined by CBC. Upper Caldecote. Land West of The Pastures, Upper Caldecote (CB/18/01526/RM) a reserved matters application for the erection of 40 dwellings including appearance, landscaping, layout and scale following outline approval of CB/16/03283/OUT. The detailed application was considered by the Planning Committee and approved with several comments being made on the mix of dwellings; car parking; the capacity of the foul sewer and drainage of surface water; and increase of traffic. The application has not yet been determined by CBC. Northill. Land between 21 and 39 Thorncote Road, Northill (CB/18/02715/OUT) an outline application for up to 10 dwellings to include 2 bungalows, with all matters reserved except access. The outline application was considered by the Planning Committee and approved, because the site has already been allocated for development in CBC’s draft Local Plan. When a full application is received, a Public Meeting will be held to gauge residents opinions on the proposal. Northill Parish Council have submitted three planning applications to carry out work to trees in conservation areas. These are to a Lime tree on Ickwell Green; to two Oak trees at Northill Cemetery; and to the Poplar trees at Northill Green. There is a possibility that the Lime tree on Ickwell Green may need to be felled but this will not be done unless recommended by the tree specialist at CBC. NEIGHBOURHOOD PLANNING UPDATE The Neighbourhood Plan Steering Group has made minor adjustments to the draft Neighbourhood Plan, responding to comments received at consultations earlier this year. The final document is currently being prepared, ready for NPC to consider at it’s next meeting on Thurs Sept 13th. If approved, it will then be submitted to CBC for a further 6 week consultation and then examination by a government inspector. Meantime, some important supporting documents (Consultation Statement, Conditions Statement and the Site Assessment Report) are being finalised. PAGE 3 NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL ISSUE 42 A1 and Black Cat Roundabout Update In May, Cllrs Smith, Turner, Bennett and Papworth attended a meeting organ- ised by Alistair Burt MP with neighbouring parish councils and representatives from the Depts of Transport (DfT)and Housing, Communities and Local Gov- ernment (MCHLG). In 2016, the view was that there was no business case to answer for an upgrade to the A1. However, follow on studies taking into ac- count the impact of the Ox-Cambs corridor, associated ambitious housing plans, A14 and the Black Cat issues indicate that the argument for re-aligning the A1 becomes more compelling. MCHLG said that homes must be built where there is demand, and that they are commencing “deals” with local authorities enabling the infrastructure re- quired to be built first. eg Oxfordshire has received central funding (£215m quoted) towards infrastructure in exchange for building houses over the local need. The meeting was concerned that A1 improvements might be depend- ant on housing. More joined up thinking was required between the two depts. NORTHILL PAROCHIAL CHARITIES ELIZABETH HUTCHINSON CHARITY In November 2018, the Trustees will consider applications for assistance for the purchase of books, tools, clothing etc from students who have completed their statutory education and are under the age of 25. Applicants must reside in the Parish of Northill, and study at University, Training College or College of Further Education, either full time or part time. Application forms can be obtained from the Clerk to the Charity Trustees at the address below or re- quested by email from [email protected]. Completed forms must be returned by post not later than noon on 22nd October 2018. J J PAYNE, Clerk to the Charity Trustees, 40 Shakespeare Drive, Upper Caldecote, Biggleswade, SG18 9DD COULD YOU BE A FOREVER FAMILY FOR A CHILD? Children in Bedfordshire are in need of people or families who can provide, love, time, commitment and the security of feeling safe and loved. Children in your community need families who will: • Consider foster to adopt • Consider an older child • Consider adopting siblings • Support a child with additional needs • Celebrate and support a child’s heritage. To find out more about supporting children in your community, visit www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/adoption or get in touch by: Email: [email protected] Tel: 0300 300 8090 Follow on Facebook: facebook.com/adoptioncb ISSUE 42 NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL PAGE 4 SHUTTLEWORTH AIRSHOWS Some concerns have recently been raised by a parishioner with regard to the flying at Shuttleworth:- 1. Excessive noise, not just on flying days but practising 2. Flying below or 500ft 3. Closure of local roads on air show days 4. The cost of road closures and the policing of the roads. Some of your councillors met with two of the Shuttleworth trustees to discuss these concerns. Excessive Noise – Practising Some pilots have been practising their acrobatic displays and these can be quite noisy. Shuttleworth have no direct control over private pilots, but all pilots visiting Shuttleworth are briefed on the location of the populated areas that sur- round Shuttleworth and the need to avoid these areas. Excessive Noise – Flying Days Shuttleworth have been fortunate in securing some high profile, but unfortunate- ly noisy, visitors in recent months. Most notably the Red Arrows and Typhoon. Unlike most of the aircraft in its own collection, these visitors are both loud and very fast. In order to align with the runway to offer the crowd the best possible display, they are unable to avoid flying over populated areas. In future Shuttle- worth will give Council notice of the planned timing of these displays such that we can spread the word to those people that are most likely to be impacted. For example riders of horses with a nervous disposition Flying below 500 feet The trustees assured us that they are very careful to comply with all current CAA legislation. We were shown the map of Shuttleworth and surrounding area that is used to brief all visiting pilots (see opposite). Pilots are also briefed on populated areas to avoid. There are a couple of exceptions. 1. On take off and landing the 500 foot rule does not apply, rather prefer- ence is given to adopting the safest line when approaching the runway. 2. More modern (and significantly faster) jet aircraft simply do not have the manoeuvrability to avoid the populated areas. Here, the CAA stipulation is that at all times the aircraft should be able to glide to a safe area clear of population. The trustees assured us that if anyone spotting, what they believe to be exces- sively low flying, can they please provide photographic evidence. This should include a reference point on the ground in order that the height can be calculat- ed. ISSUE 42 NORTHILL PARISH COUNCIL PAGE 5 Road Closures The road closures are a consequence of the findings following the Shoreham enquiry. The issue is not the safety of traffic travelling along these routes, it is people stopping along these routes and forming ‘secondary crowds’. The fatalities at Shoreham were at just such a secondary crowd. The CAA have instructed all display organisers to take steps to prevent these secondary crowds forming. Shuttleworth have no authority to ‘move people on’ should they choose to stop on the verges, or on private land, to view their displays. They therefore have had no option but to close the roads and footpaths where secondary crowds are known to form. This is a very expensive solution, with Shuttleworth bearing the full costs, including enforcing the closures (the police do not offer this service).
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